Exploring the Valley

From High School Sweethearts To High Country Guides

PC PRODUCTIONS Season 2 Episode 3

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0:00 | 27:21

What makes someone trade the easy path for a winding mountain road and a van full of strangers who become friends by sunset? Phil Holderman joins us to share how a high school romance, a deep love for Western North Carolina, and an obsession with good views turned into TP Day Trip Adventures, a small-group tour company built for people who want the magic without the guesswork. We dig into the real stories behind crowd-favorite stops like Mount Mitchell, the tallest peak east of the Mississippi, and Klingmans Dome, where a century-old rivalry still colors the way we point at the horizon.

Phil walks through how he plans a perfect day: timing the drive for clear skies, choosing short trails that feel enchanted, and adding local flavor with a lunch stop that could be pizza, barbecue, or a serendipitous dessert downtown. He shares the human side of guiding too, from welcoming bachelorette groups during an ice storm to giving visiting families enough mountain facts to fill a scrapbook. Along the way, we talk about why people stay in Black Mountain and Swannanoa—how neighbors show up after storms, how independent restaurants keep the streets lively, and how a holiday tradition of dressing as the Grinch became a community highlight that delights kids and keeps the mystery alive.

If you’re plotting a quick getaway or scouting a base for a longer Blue Ridge escape, this conversation is a ready-made itinerary. You’ll hear practical tips for choosing trails in Montreat, why Mount Craig deserves a mention next to Mount Mitchell, and how to find TP Day Trip Adventures through local chambers or a simple Google search. More than anything, you’ll feel the pull of a place where mountain air and small-town warmth meet in the middle. Enjoy the ride, and when you’re done, subscribe, leave a review, and share this episode with a friend who needs a day trip on the calendar.

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Meet Phil: Local Life & Family

SPEAKER_00

Bill Holderman, I am really glad you're here today. And I um do you remember the first time we met? You you were helping me with the building. You came in to I don't know what you were doing there, something. And uh you came in and you were like, hey, we need to fix this, this, and this. And that was the first time I met you and you kind of scared me. And then I found out that you were not anybody to be afraid of, and I found out that everybody in town knows Phil Holderman.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, I'm not a scary guy at all.

SPEAKER_00

But I thought you were. You're totally not. But so for anybody who doesn't know Phil Holderman, tell me who you are. What's your story? Where are you from?

SPEAKER_01

I'm from here. I'm local born here. I was raised in Swaninois. I've been here for 53 years coming this April. And I've been married for 34 years. I met her in high school, and we've stayed in the valley and raised our kids and grandkids.

SPEAKER_00

What's her name?

SPEAKER_01

Tanya.

SPEAKER_00

With an eye.

SPEAKER_01

With an eye.

SPEAKER_00

That's right. Good. I really like both of you and I enjoy both of you coming in. It's funny. She works for a company, Always Best Care, and they take care of seniors. And then you're the guy who does the fun, cool job, which we'll talk about in a minute. But it of the both of you come in for different reasons, and it's fun to always get to talk to y'all. Tell me a little bit about, let's say you went to Owen High School.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Class of 1992.

SPEAKER_00

Holy cow, back in the 1900s.

SPEAKER_01

Yes.

SPEAKER_00

Wow. Okay. And you raised your children here. How many children do you have?

SPEAKER_01

I've got two girls.

SPEAKER_00

Two girls. And they have how many children?

SPEAKER_01

Each girl has two kids.

SPEAKER_00

And they visit, it feels like there's like nine. It does. Yeah. Okay. How did you meet Tanya? Did y'all meet in high school? You said that.

SPEAKER_01

I met Tanya, and she'd be so proud of me to remember these dates, probably times too, but I met Tanya October the 31st, 1988, at a Halloween party.

SPEAKER_00

What was your costume?

SPEAKER_01

Me.

SPEAKER_00

Well, that is frightening. What about Tanya? What was she doing?

SPEAKER_01

Somebody said that a good-looking girl from Reynolds is going to be there. So I went there, me and a friend of mine, Chris. And uh that's when I met Tanya.

SPEAKER_00

Well, good. What was she dressed as?

SPEAKER_01

As Tanya. So it was not a costume party. It was not a costume party.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, well, you gotta say that.

SPEAKER_01

Just a Halloween party. Just a Halloween party. Hanging out, eating candy, and meeting the one you're gonna be with for the rest of your life.

Love Story And Community Ties

SPEAKER_00

That's very awesome. That's cool. Well, that was a good choice to go to that party. Yeah. So y'all have lived here all this time. Your kids are grown and flown, and you have these other children. You all w own TP Day Trip Adventures. And when you've when I first met you, that was one of the coolest things about you. I think it's the you have an amazing van that people go ride in and whatever. But tell me about where you take them. What you what do you do? Tell me about it.

SPEAKER_01

We take people to state and national parks, like for instance, Mount Mitchell. It's the highest peak east of the Mississippi, and it's just right up the road from us. And I love taking people up there. Since the hurricane, it's been on and off, you know, so it's coming back. Uh we we also take people to Kowohe, known as Chim uh Klingman's Dome. We go to Chimley Rock, Grandfather Mountain, and just, you know, state national parks. We also do trips for people that come in. Like I just did a bachelorette party over the weekend.

SPEAKER_00

Oh Lord, in that ice storm.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, what uh they got out, they're from Georgia. They flew up here and they flew up here, we did it, and then they flew back the next day. So they needed to get out of here before the storm hit.

SPEAKER_00

Well, good.

SPEAKER_01

Whether it was snow or ice.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, whatever it was. Where did y'all go?

SPEAKER_01

We I took them to uh Bold Rock.

SPEAKER_00

So you're talking about things I don't know yet. Maybe I need to just ride around in your van for a week. Let's go. Let's go. Let's get them. Yeah. Do you take one person on the van? Do you take 15 people? What what's your how does it work?

Launching TP Day Trip Adventures

SPEAKER_01

Well, when we started the business, uh, we got a capacity that we could fit in the van. We can fit 14 people. Counting me, we got 15. Normally, what have what we've been taking is five to six people. Um, I have taken one person on trips. I've taken two. Preferably, we would rather take groups of people. That's that's what we started to do. We want to take groups of people. That's the over the last weekend we took a bachelorette party around and stuff. But we've we've taken people that's that's flew in from all over, from New Jersey, New York, Michigan.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, that's cool.

SPEAKER_01

That's come down to the Asheville area and we've we've taken them out.

SPEAKER_00

Very cool. So how do people find you?

SPEAKER_01

I think they're finding us through the chambers. Really? Black Mountain of Sworn Oil Chamber, the Asheville Chamber, and they can type in on Google TP's day trips, and it pops up. I mean, if you type in day trip, TPs will will pop up.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. So you're so your website's helping a lot.

SPEAKER_01

Yes.

SPEAKER_00

Well, very cool. In my opinion, you would be a blast. You're you're you're I think you're nervous this morning because you're not being Phil Holderman, that's super fun prankster guy. But to me, it would be, I think you would be really fun to go on a trip with Tanya too. Don't, I'm not like trying to get a trip with you here, but but it'd be really fun to go with. I think that you know the area. Y'all how did y'all I that's one of the cool things is how y'all started the business, how you decided to make it into a business. Tell me about that.

SPEAKER_01

Well, I always tell people that it was Tanya's senior project in high school. But it it was uh, it was that, but it's something that we've talked about and wanted to do for years. And me and Tanya always get out. We always go to these places. And then we just sat down one day and we said, you know what, we need to start a business. We want to take people to these places that stand out. I mean, Mount Mitchell's the highest peak east of the Mississippi. How many people have been there? Right. Even locals, right? And we we want to take people there and show them what is in our area.

SPEAKER_00

My dad grew up uh up in Montreat, and as a kid, eight, nine years old, he and his buddies would go hike to Mount Mitchell and spend the night in the woods. And I'm like, Well, did you have like parents with you? And he's like, No, you just went camping. There were a couple kids that were a couple years older. I'm like, what? So so really from here, it's only like 11 miles walking, but it's what, an hour and a half in the car to get there?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, an hour or something like that.

Signature Stops: Mount Mitchell & Beyond

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. But I just think that's amazing that these kids used to just go hike and they'd spend the night in the woods and come back the next day and their parents would find. That's awesome. I I just think that's amazing to think that it's that close, I guess, is it it surprises me because you can see it. We we see it, we know where it is. But I actually just went as a grown-up, maybe a month or two ago. I just went for the first time. Yeah, I mean, I used to go as a kid. We used to drive over there, but anyway, I am going to hop in the van and ride with y'all sometime soon. Let's go. Let's do it. We've got to do this because I need to know these things. People come in the visitor center, and I don't know the answers. They're like, well, where's Klingman's Dome? I'm like, well, I've got a map right here. Let me show you. Talk to me about Christmas time. You do something that's a little different from most people. It's not easy being green.

SPEAKER_01

Well, you know, that time of the year, it Is it a secret? No. Okay. The kids love to see the Grinch. You're the Grinch. Yes. That's I was gonna tell you, Tanya's the Grinch, but no, she's not tall enough to be the Grinch.

SPEAKER_00

She's only five foot six, right?

SPEAKER_01

Five foot.

SPEAKER_00

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Mutt and Jeff over there.

SPEAKER_01

Yes.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. So tell me how'd you decide to become the Grinch? And tell me what what do you do? What are you doing?

SPEAKER_01

I don't know. It's it's been so long ago since I started doing it. I I think I just saw it online, and me and Tonya were sitting there, and it's like, you need to be the Grinch because I was watching the movie so many times, and I'm talking like the Grinch and acting it out, and it's like we got to put a float in the Black Mountain Parade and do this. That's awesome. Since then to now, the uniform has gotten better, and we we put a float in it every year. And I just I love seeing the kids' faces.

SPEAKER_00

Very cool. Well, I'm gonna grab you one day. We're gonna go do we're gonna go do something next Christmas time. Ooh, we could do it in the middle of the summer and freak people out. Anyway, sorry. Yes, we're gonna have a good time.

SPEAKER_01

We could.

SPEAKER_00

No, I love that you're the Grinch, and that's fun. It's funny how many times I'm somewhere and somebody will say, Did you know that the Grinch was here? And they don't have a clue who it is. That's why I asked if it was a secret, because they don't know. People don't know who it is, and I think that's funny. Yeah. Anyway. Y'all were with which which float were you with this year? Were you your own?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, we was our own float.

SPEAKER_00

What'd you register as?

SPEAKER_01

You don't know, Tanya did it. Tanya's not here. I can't remember.

SPEAKER_00

Tanya did it.

SPEAKER_01

I only put this in there. I'll just walk behind it and go hug kids. That's right. I have a picture. And pick on adults.

SPEAKER_00

That's right. I said I was gonna say I have a picture of you and me at that float at that parade. All right, so tell me about high school. You were you were a sports guy. What did you do? What did you what sports did you play?

SPEAKER_01

Growing up, I played baseball, basketball, and football. And baseball faded away as I got to high school. I played two years in high school basketball, and then that faded away for me. And I I played football all four years at high school. I started as a freshman on the varsity football team.

SPEAKER_00

And what position did you play?

SPEAKER_01

I was a tight end and outside linebacker and punter.

Guests, Group Sizes, And How To Book

SPEAKER_00

Oh, okay. That's a funny combination, isn't it? It is. Okay. It is. I don't know a whole lot about football, but those did not go together in my head.

SPEAKER_01

So I had scholarships to go to Western Western Carolina University and Liberty as a punter and receiver, but I didn't go because I had to take care of a a baby and I just got married.

SPEAKER_00

There you go. Well, that's good. That was a good choice. Yes. Yes. Anyway, so Liberty, that's pretty far away.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Would you have gone where the situation was different, do you think?

SPEAKER_01

Yes.

SPEAKER_00

Did you want to go away when you were a kid? Were you like, I can't wait to move, or were you one of the ones who wanted to stay here?

SPEAKER_01

I wanted to stay here.

SPEAKER_00

So that's funny to me. I think on the last four podcasts, we've had one person who grew up here and said, I really wanted to leave, and then I came back. Yeah. But it's funny that I guess two or three of y'all have been like, no, I never wanted to leave. And I think that's unusual. Do you think that's a good one?

SPEAKER_01

I wanted to just stay here because my mom and dad lives here. Uh my older sister, my twin sister, my brother lives in Fayetteville. But my I wanted to take care of my mom and dad. You know, when my dad couldn't mow the yard, I went down and mowed it and I took care of them. I just I couldn't leave my family and my friends that are still living here.

SPEAKER_00

That's exactly what Laurie Morris said. And I think that's really that I don't know. I'm starting to see a trend here. Is that a black mountain swine a thing? I don't know. I don't know. That's interesting. All right, so you stayed, and your parents still here?

SPEAKER_01

No, they've they've passed away.

SPEAKER_00

They have a long time ago.

SPEAKER_01

My dad did in 2004, and my mama passed in 2019.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. All right. Well, that must be hard to not have them here.

SPEAKER_01

It is, but I've got their memories.

SPEAKER_00

That's right.

SPEAKER_01

They raised me right.

SPEAKER_00

They raised you right. They sure did. You are Mr. Chivalry, and I appreciate that. He still holds the door for people when they come in the door and takes care of people. All right. So you have siblings. They live in Fayetteville. Did they come back?

SPEAKER_01

I've got an older sister that lives in the house that I grew up in. That's cool. And she's older than me. I'm not going to tell you how old. I've got an older brother that lives in Fayetteville. And I've got a twin sister that lives here in Black Mountain with me. There's two of you? There's two of us.

SPEAKER_00

Oh my goodness. That's frightening.

Why People Stay: Food And Small-Town Flavor

SPEAKER_01

I'm the better looking of the two. But, you know, I mean, that's what I tell everybody.

SPEAKER_00

That's right. That's right.

SPEAKER_01

It's not true.

SPEAKER_00

Not true. I don't know. I don't know. I've never met her. I didn't even know she existed.

SPEAKER_01

We was right in the middle of Black Mountain.

SPEAKER_00

Very cool. Do I know her?

SPEAKER_01

You know Jack Taylor?

SPEAKER_00

Not yet.

SPEAKER_01

Jack's from Black Mountain. He's lived here forever, and he used to drive a UPS truck and deliver here in Black Mountain. Then he retired from that.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. And that's his That's his why?

SPEAKER_01

My twin sister's husband.

SPEAKER_00

Got it. Okay. So I gotta meet these people.

SPEAKER_01

That'll be cool.

SPEAKER_00

Thank you. All right. Tell me about our community. What's your what's your what if somebody if somebody's in your van and they've they've they've they don't live here, they don't have a clue. What it what makes Black Mountain Swannola so awesome? Why why do you still live here?

SPEAKER_01

The community. I'll just tell you, you know, s since the storm, we've we've had a bad hit. And my 53, I'll turn 53 in April, by the way, but I'll go ahead and say my 53 years here growing up in the valley. And when you say valley, you're talking about Black Mountain, you're talking about Ridgecrest, Black Mountain, Swannanoa. And it's it's home. It's it's family, it's friends. And being in Black Mountain for so long, it's when you know, when the storm hit, me and Tonya went out and started helping wherever we could. And, you know, it didn't matter who you were, it didn't matter who you voted for, it didn't matter who you liked. Everybody came together as one.

SPEAKER_00

Was it like that before the storm?

SPEAKER_01

To me it was.

SPEAKER_00

That's what I keep hearing, and I don't I just don't hear that. To me. I've lived a lot of places, and I don't hear that anywhere else.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Why do you think that is?

SPEAKER_01

It's it's just a hometown atmosphere. It's Black Mountain is it's you know, it's family. You know, people we may be a little different in this and that, but everybody still comes together as a family and we we help each other out. That's like walking downtown Black Mountain and just I love going down there. You can eat, you can shop. You can taste children, they can play in the water park in the middle of the road, it's so much fun.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, there's really only four of them? Grandchildren?

SPEAKER_01

Yes.

SPEAKER_00

That's amazing. I always thought there were maybe they have friends with them sometimes.

SPEAKER_01

Let's see, four, five, six, and eight.

SPEAKER_00

Holy cow. Well, you do a good job of corralling them and you and you I always I don't I rarely see you by yourself without nine or ten children.

SPEAKER_01

See, grandchildren are great because you can play with them and send them back home.

SPEAKER_00

There you go. There you go. What are your what kind of traditions do you and your family have that maybe once you had did with your girls and now you're doing them with your grandchildren?

SPEAKER_01

Swimming. Where do you swim? In my backyard. You have a pool? Yeah, I got a pool. Oh, good. It's it's a lot of upkeep.

SPEAKER_00

I know.

SPEAKER_01

But it's so much fun grabbing a grandkid and just throwing them in.

SPEAKER_00

Yep.

SPEAKER_01

Life life jacket, okay.

The Grinch Tradition And Parade Fun

SPEAKER_00

Okay, whatever. Yeah. So do they go on these adventures? The T T P day trip adventures. You taking them?

SPEAKER_01

Not my grandkids, but my my two girls, they're 34 and 31. Emily just turned 31 the other day. Happy birthday, Emily. And those girls have been with me and Tanya growing up. We've we've gone everywhere and they've been with us. So they've had they have experienced what we are doing now for TPs.

SPEAKER_00

Cool. I love that part of the the business, is that it really did start with just y'all doing your thing and doing what you love doing. And then anytime somebody can do what they love to do for their business, I think it's I think that's magic. I love it when that happens. All right, you eat at the bistro a lot. A lot. A lot. And that's how I get to see you a lot because you all come visit me after you eat at the bistro.

SPEAKER_01

Or before.

SPEAKER_00

Where else do you like to go?

SPEAKER_01

My father's pizza.

SPEAKER_00

Really? What do you get there?

SPEAKER_01

Steak and cheese sub every time I go there.

SPEAKER_00

Every time.

SPEAKER_01

Yes.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. So my father's pizza. Bistro. Give me one more. That's y'all's go-to place.

SPEAKER_01

Phil's Barbecue.

SPEAKER_00

Is that yours? I mean, your name's Phil. Do they name it after you?

SPEAKER_01

No. Even though we are neighbors.

SPEAKER_00

I didn't know that.

SPEAKER_01

But no, that's Phil's I love Phil's barbecue. We love going there and supporting him and my father's pizza, the bistro, there's uh all the restaurants in Black Mountain, and it's hard to say this one's better than that one, but there's I love our food here in Black Mountain.

SPEAKER_00

Isn't it funny? Because it is hard to pick a page.

SPEAKER_01

It is, it is.

SPEAKER_00

How many restaurants do we have that are independently owned in this town?

SPEAKER_01

Whoa.

SPEAKER_00

What you'd guess.

SPEAKER_01

Ten.

SPEAKER_00

Thirty-eight. Wow. Isn't that amazing?

unknown

Wow.

SPEAKER_00

I mean, we've got all those international foods. We've got I mean, it's just and I've I have I have been to 37 of the 38 that I love.

SPEAKER_01

Which one?

SPEAKER_00

Well, I'm not gonna tell you the one because that sounds like they're bad. And it's not it's not that they're bad, it's that I haven't found what I love there. And that's on me. I gotta go back again and see if we try something else. People tell me all the time what to try there, so I need to go there. I think I'll do that today. That way I can't say that again after this week. There we go. Okay.

SPEAKER_01

You're making me hungry. I know.

SPEAKER_00

If we could go eat right now, where would you go?

SPEAKER_01

I don't know, but I want barbecue and macaroni, like a mac and cheese barbecue plate. Where can we get that at?

SPEAKER_00

I don't know, but in in in the town I used to live in, they had redneck lasagna. Have you ever heard of that?

SPEAKER_01

No, but it sounds like I like it.

Sports, Scholarship Choices, And Staying Local

SPEAKER_00

It's amazing. It's macro, and you can make this at any barbecue place that you like. You the mac and cheese goes on the bottom and then the barbecue just goes on top. So it's like a layer, like lasagna. That's the only reason they call it lasagna because it's layered. But I'm telling you, the combination is mac daddy awesome. You got to put your fork all the way in and get let's go.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, I'm hungry.

SPEAKER_00

Let's go eat. What time does Phil's open?

SPEAKER_01

Nail. Let's go.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, let's go. No, we can't go yet. So you've got people in your van, you're driving around, and they're like, wow, I really like it here. There's so many cool things to see, and Western North Carolina is gorgeous. Thank you for taking all these places. But what's it like to actually live here? What's it like? What would you tell me if I was visiting and I decided I wanted to tell all my cousins to come here one time? What would you tell them? Why would why would people come here?

SPEAKER_01

Well, we could talk about Black Mountain, the the downtown Black Mountain area. There's plenty of places to shop, to get food, to get desserts. There's a museum, there's hiking trails, we have a park. We also have golfing in Black Mountain. And there's plenty to do here and see.

SPEAKER_00

Very cool. But the community, you said that's why you would live here, continue to live here as a community. There is a lot to do here. I'm working on a tourism package right now, and you and I need to sit down and talk about that. But but trying to work on the tourism side of it because people don't know what all is here. And they come in the visitor center and they say, What do we do? And we have to narrow it down to, well, did you want to hike? Do you want to eat? Do you want to go to a brewery? Do you want to go here? Do you want to go biking? What do you want to do? Did you know we have a sailboat regatta thing here? What? Thank you. That makes me feel better. There's a remote control sailboat. Your grandkids would love this. Sailboat regatta, and I think it's on, I think it's on Wednesdays at like one o'clock at Lake Tomahawk. You need to go see it. But there's things like that that people don't know exist. And where did I learn about that? On this podcast. Somebody sitting across the table from me told me about it.

SPEAKER_01

Well, I just learned that myself.

SPEAKER_00

Well, good. See? But there are. There are so many things to do here. And people can come and stay for a week. They can stay for just 24, 48 hours, and they they have plenty to do. But there are people who come and stay for three months. And there's also plenty of that too. Lots of Airbnbs, lots of smaller, like they're not called micro hotels, but they're called, I don't know, like little villages that exist or whatever. Anyway, lots of places to stay. And then there's lots of day trips you could take that aren't. I'm not like I'm not saying TP day trip adventures again. I'm just saying you can go to Waynesville for the day and go explore over there and come back. And there's still, you know, you can stay a long time. That's what we're doing, is we're trying to go on day trips just to different towns and different little burgs around here and see them. So that's that's good. But all right, so you have to go on one day trip. Only one. Somebody's here for one day and they call you up. Where are you taking them and why?

SPEAKER_01

I will go back to Mount Mitchell. Yep. I have been at the visitor center when people are walking in and they ask me questions. I guess because they think I work there. So maybe you might want to hire me. But anyway, sure. They want to go to waterfalls.

SPEAKER_00

Mm-hmm.

What Makes Black Mountain Special

SPEAKER_01

They want to go hiking and see the mountain views and stuff. I mean, what better than Montreat to go up hiking up lookout? But my number one place for TPs to take somebody would be Mount Mitchell because it's it's close. And if it feels a little bit longer than what the trip normally is, it's because you climb in that high elevation to get up there.

SPEAKER_00

It's true. I didn't know about the little trail that right when you come down from walk I'm not a hiker. Right. If you can't tell.

SPEAKER_01

Yes.

SPEAKER_00

I'm a I'm a riding the car kind of girl.

SPEAKER_01

Let's go.

SPEAKER_00

So, yeah. But then when you walk up to the top of the thing and you look at the overlook, which is amazing. And I mean, it anyway, and then you come back down, those little trails that are back there in the woods, yeah, you feel like you're in oh, what's that movie? The little gnome people. I ha everybody loves it. What is the name of it, Peter? Murdy people like it. The little Gandalf and Oh.

unknown

Lord of the Rings.

SPEAKER_00

Thank you. It's the little trail back there, and you feel like you're in like Lord of the Rings or something like that.

SPEAKER_01

I mean, do you know what I'm talking about? I do. Me and Tonya hiked it the last time we went up there two years ago in April.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

And it snow it was a snow on the ground coming up that trail. So it was beautiful.

SPEAKER_00

I I don't know why we went. I just saw it and I thought, well, that looks like a little trail that would be fun to go on. That was the coolest thing. I if somebody said to me, What's your favorite? It's not really a hike because it's not that long. I guess it's still a hike. It counts. Count it. Anyway, but that would be my favorite thing that I've done since I got here that wasn't in our specific little area.

SPEAKER_01

Do you know every time I go up to Mount Mitchell and I'm I'm on the top? Tanya's like, oh gosh, you're going to talk to somebody. And I'm like, Yeah, I talk to everybody. That's what I do. And that you can see people that's there and they're just looking at all these mountain peaks. And of course, I just slide over there and I say, Did you know that you're on the tallest peak east of the Mississippi at 6,684 feet? And they're like, Yeah. And I said, Did you know that one right behind us is the second highest peak? It's called Mount Craig. And then if you look that way, you can barely see that peak. And that's the third highest peak.

SPEAKER_00

I didn't know any of that.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. You can see that the third. It's Klingman's, but Kowo. It's known as Kowohe.

SPEAKER_00

Didn't know that. See, I need to go on a trip. See, I I just always invite myself to things. I don't have any trouble doing that. I'm very shy.

SPEAKER_01

I could let you know who just who did the height of the peaks.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

And who they are and why they did it and why they got the names. I mean back you got Mount Mitchell and behind it, number two is Mount Craig, and then behind Mount Craig you got Big Tom's Peak. Okay. Otherwise known as Big Tom. I could I could I love telling people all about Big Tom.

SPEAKER_00

See, you need to take people. You should do this for a living. I'm gonna try to. I think that's a good idea. Yeah. Okay, second favorite place, Klingman's Dome.

SPEAKER_01

Nope. I have been to Klingman's Dome so many times. I love it. It's beautiful. Probably Klingman's Dome. Yes.

SPEAKER_00

Klingman's Dome.

SPEAKER_01

Yep.

SPEAKER_00

All right. What do you tell people when you just happen to meet them at the top of that?

SPEAKER_01

I find Mount Mitchell and I say, look that way. That's the tallest picture. That's the tallest picture. The funniest thing about Mount Mitchell and Klingman's Dome is they was in a feud back in the 1800s.

SPEAKER_00

What does that mean? What were they fighting over?

Planning Perfect Day Trips For Visitors

SPEAKER_01

Klingman was a student under Mitchell at Chapel Hill.

SPEAKER_00

I didn't know that.

SPEAKER_01

Yep. This is back before the Civil War time, so that takes you that far back. And several years, you know, some sometime later, they got into a, I'm gonna say a feud maybe about whose was taller. And Klingman was looking at that mountain peak, and Elijah Mitchell was looking at his, and it was it was a feud, and it came to figure out that Mount Mitchell's was higher. But the the funny thing about it is is me and Tonya talk about this all the time. The tower that goes up Klingman's right now is four feet higher than Mount Mitchell.

SPEAKER_00

Then how did he win?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. It's just the top of the tree.

SPEAKER_00

Just the thing.

SPEAKER_01

And that's the legistry.

SPEAKER_00

Or is that real?

SPEAKER_01

That's real.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. I just interrupted you. What were you gonna say? You don't know.

SPEAKER_01

I was gonna say, you know, Klingman's. He was saying his was the highest, but Mount Mitchell's the highest, but Klingman's wasn't even the second highest because Craig's the highest. So but anyway, I I don't care who's the highest. I love going there. It's beautiful views. Love seeing people and talking to people when we go there.

SPEAKER_00

Cool. Do you take more locals or more visitors on these trips?

SPEAKER_01

Visitors.

SPEAKER_00

How do we get locals to go on them? Because I live here. I haven't been to Klingman's Dome.

SPEAKER_01

You just find that sunny weekend, sad Friday, Saturday, Sunday, whatever day, and you just go.

SPEAKER_00

Let's plan a trip.

SPEAKER_01

Wouldn't it we?

SPEAKER_00

Let's do a chamber trip where the whole we can sell it to people and get them to come and let's do that. We need to. I think that's important. Anyway, thank you for coming today. I appreciate you being here. And I appreciate hearing a little bit more about TP day trip adventures, because we keep saying I'm gonna get in the van and go with y'all sometime, and I just haven't done it. So let's get out the calendar next time you're at the visitor center and we'll make it happen. We will do it. All right. Thank you, sir. Yep. Thanks for joining us on Exploring the Valley. Until next time, keep celebrating the pride of our community and discovering the magic of the mountains. In the meantime, you're free to move about the valley.